Founded in 1993 by brothers Tom and David Gardner, The Motley Fool helps millions of people attain financial freedom through our website, podcasts, books, newspaper column, radio show, and premium investing services.

Will the iPad Disappoint in Apple's Q3 Earnings?

Apple's iPad faces the same troubling tablet trends that every other tablet vendor is experiencing.

Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) second quarter iPad sales were a bit of a disappointment for investors. The tablet's sales decreased more than 16% year-over-year and left the company's CEO Tim Cook spending time on the earnings call explaining why the iPad failed to deliver for the quarter.

With Apple reporting quarterly results later this week, the big question is whether or not the company's second-biggest revenue producer can outperform the year-ago quarter.

Source: Screenshot from Apple video ad.

Fortune's Philip Elmer DeWitt put out his quarterly consensus report, and results show analysts (as usual) have mixed predictions. On the high side some analysts predict 16 million iPads sold, with the lowest estimate pegged at just over 12 million. That's a big range, and leaves the consensus at about 14.4 million.

If Apple's iPad sales hit that average it would be another disappointing quarter -- the company sold 14.62 million in Q3 2013.

Source: Apple.

Apple earns 17% of its overall revenue from the iPad, the iPhone takes the majority of revenue at 59%. But even though the iPad isn't the key revenue driver, sales of the tablet significantly impact the company's bottom line.

In Q2, Tim Cook said the drop in iPad sales year-over-year came from channel inventory problems and a stabilization of iPad Mini supply and demand.

He tried assuaging investors by talking about how the iPad is the "fastest growing product in Apple's history."

But future iPad problems may be out of the company's control.

Tablet setbacks for all Samsung (OTC:SSNLF) reported its quarterly guidance earlier this month and admitted its tablet sales were "sluggish." The company said two things were to blame. The first is the longer replacement cycle tablets have compared to smartphones. The second is that larger smartphones are eating into small tablet sales.

That matches up with recent NPD Display Search data showing small tablet unit share peaked in 2013, but will continue to decline. The research firm said, "Major brands are likely to move to larger sizes" and that the larger form factor will continue to overtake smaller tablets through 2018. That may be one of the reasons why Lenovo just stopped sales of its 8-inch Windows tablets in the US.

iPad Mini. Source: Apple.

But it's not just the small tablet market Apple has to worry about. Gartner released a report earlier this month showing the PC market is stabilizing and the tablet shipments overall are slowing down.

The research firm said many consumers have already replaced PCs with tablets for things like entertainment viewing, and it's "seeing a slowdown in premium tablet sales, which have already penetrated a large number of households."

We'll find out this week whether or not Apple is able to buff its own channel inventory issues of last quarter and the broader slowdown in tablet sales, but I think Apple will have a hard time overcoming slowing tablet growth. The third quarter hasn't traditionally been a strong one for iPad sales, and with replacement cycles slowing, many consumers who already wanted the latest iPad may have already upgraded in Apple's typically strong first quarter.